Abstract

The pastoral ministry of care-giving inevitably implies a cost. The spiritual ethos in the Christian ministry implies a huge sacrifice. Dietrich Bonhoeffer (see footnote 9 in the article) described this ethos as 'the cost of discipleship'. Very specifically in the case of unexpected and the so-called 'undeserved modes of suffering', the meaning framework of the caregiver is being interpenetrated, causing a kind of 'depleted sense of being'. It is argued here that an appropriate diagnosis, and a description of the phenomenon of compassion fatigue, can help caregivers to better understand their sense of being depleted. Instead of leaving the pastoral ministry, this can help them to attend anew to their spiritual capacity. In this regard, a theology of compassion, framed by theopaschitic theology, can help pastors to become 'healed' in order to re-enter the pastoral ministry and regain a sense of parrh?sia.